*zap*
WKR
good luck, the blue book was printed in '69 it is a binder book that allows removal of pages so I can copy them...some get copied onto rite in the rain paper. Very good listing of edible plants with decent descriptions.
My wife calls be ignorant all the time. I apologize for any hyperbole. It would probably have been best to articulate that my experience is based on living in or near the costal USA and the suggested preparations of 99% of the folks on the internet/high priced training courses focus on preparation for an event that very well could happen but in the meantime folks will likely face a disaster of much smaller scale of which most folks are completely unprepared for. I absolutely keep preparations well past what I suggested but most people start with stockpiling and gear and completely overlook the basics.That's a pretty ignorant, broad brush statement.
What about diapers in the winter time?I don’t know when the term ‘prepper’ came about.
All I know is I grew up with being frugal and making things last.
When I was a kid, my parents raised me and my 2 sisters on a rural farm with no running water.
There was a well to water the cattle but it wasn’t fit to drink.
My mom would wash diapers in the creek when it thawed in the spring.
We had a big garden and canned the veggies and the meat my dad shot in the fall.
It can be done. Not much has changed in the technique, only the mindset of what you need in day to day living.
A pig, get one every spring and butcher one every fall (the one you got the previous spring). A goat could give milk, so it will turn grass into human food year round, rather than just at time of slaughter.We have a garden and fruit trees. My wife already cans stuff. We have about 2 dozen chickens. We are on about 4 acres up in the hills, away from town. I was looking at other livestock that might be useful, but low maintenance and easy. Maybe a potbelly pig or goat…. We don’t have much useable land.
What about diapers in the winter time?
99.5%?how will that prepare you during the dollar collapse? or when your CBDC wallet is locked because you haven't uploaded your vax passport? Cash isn’t king. It’s trash.
You're already way ahead of the game.We have a garden and fruit trees. My wife already cans stuff. We have about 2 dozen chickens. We are on about 4 acres up in the hills, away from town. I was looking at other livestock that might be useful, but low maintenance and easy. Maybe a potbelly pig or goat…. We don’t have much useable land.
You don’t remember 2021? Can’t go to restaurant without papers? When the dollar collapses the federal reserve will go to a CBDC. it’s inevitable. The govt will control your money. If you don’t think the government will force you to do things in order to access your money your are the one who is crazy my friend.99.5%?
That’s wild. What’s even more wild is that it probably wasn’t even a big deal then. Probably thought it was luxury just having diapers.Since we lived in N Minnesota, she just tossed them out in the snowbank and waited til spring.
Seriously, she would rinse them out in the barn and then when we went to town she washed clothes at the laundromat
Cormac is always the darker view!What a good book, truly an eye opener. The movie ‘the road’ is along the same premise only a bit darker.
Supplies only last so long. Knowledge and skill is where it is at. Shelter, water, fire, food and I’ll add security; can you ‘build’ them without supplies? I’m not against supply caches, but don’t forget some ‘primitive skills’ too. Lots of schools in the Virginia area.
I now realize the question mark was unnecessary.You don’t remember 2021? Can’t go to restaurant without papers? When the dollar collapses the federal reserve will go to a CBDC. it’s inevitable. The govt will control your money. If you don’t think the government will force you to do things in order to access your money your are the one who is crazy my friend.
Google CBDC.